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DEMOCRACY
Hong Kong authorities accused of hiring thugs after clashes
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) Oct 13, 2014


Hong Kong protest hero concern for family on 18th birthday
Hong Kong (AFP) Oct 13, 2014 - Teenage protest leader Joshua Wong, poster child of Hong Kong's pro-democracy movement, turned 18 on Monday and said his birthday wish was safety for loved ones as tensions in the city spilt over.

With his trademark black-rimmed glasses and mop of hair, Wong has emerged as a charismatic spokesman for the campaign for free elections -- but said his main birthday wish was for those close to him to remain unharmed, rather than any political goal.

In a post on his Facebook page he listed three wishes, with the first being: "Safety for family members, my girlfriend, and other fellow students."

University student Wong -- who has been featured on the front pages of magazines and whose private life is discussed in Hong Kong's gossip pages -- also wished his fellow protesters the "willpower to fight on" and said he hoped China would allow the city "true universal suffrage".

Hong Kong is due to hold leadership elections in 2017, but China has insisted it vet the candidates in what protesters call "fake democracy".

Demonstrators have blocked and barricaded main roads in Admiralty and two other districts for more than two weeks to press their demands.

Wong was keeping a close eye on developments throughout the day as masked men descended on barricades at the main rally site in the central business district of Admiralty, triggering clashes with protesters, just hours after police had removed some barriers.

"These events seem to be really coincidental," Wong said on his Facebook page -- which has more than 230,000 followers.

Earlier Monday he had warned of ramped-up police action after unmanned barricades at the edges of protest sites in Admiralty and secondary protest site Mongkok were taken away in a dawn operation.

"By removing these barricades the government is testing the waters of what reaction the people remaining at the site will have, in preparation for a large-scale removal in the future," Wong told reporters.

"We urge citizens to quickly travel to these occupied sites."

But it hasn't been all work and no play for Wong. In an early celebration, fellow protesters presented him with a bright yellow cake in the shape of an umbrella -- an emblem of the movement after demonstrators used them as protection from police tear gas and pepper spray.

Wong, who heads the student protest group Scholarism, rose to prominence in 2012 when he helped organise mass rallies against plans for "patriotic education" in Hong Kong schools -- seen as a Beijing brainwashing exercise.

The protests forced the Hong Kong government to shelve the idea.

In an interview with AFP in July, he spoke of the need for a concerted civil disobedience campaign, but said it was optimism for the future that kept him going.

"Without hope I wouldn't be doing this now. I do this because I think there is hope."

Dozens of masked men rushed barricades at Hong Kong's main pro-democracy site on Monday, sparking renewed accusations that authorities are using hired thugs to disperse demonstrators.

Groups of men, many wearing surgical masks, descended on the front lines of the rally at Admiralty near the city's central business district, triggering clashes with protesters after police had moved in to take down some barriers.

Demonstrators, who have come under attack from organised crime gangs known as triads at another flashpoint demonstration site in Mongkok, shouted: "Weapons! Weapons!" and "Arrest the triads" as police struggled to impose order.

Despite repeated orders to disperse, rallies now into their third week have taken on an air of permanence, with tents, portable showers and lecture venues springing up in recent days.

Pro-democracy lawmakers who back demonstrators' calls for Beijing to grant the right to direct elections in the former British colony were quick to round on the authorities.

"This is one of the tactics used by the communists in mainland China from time to time. They use triads or pro-government mobs to try to attack you so the government will not have to assume responsibility," Democratic Party lawmaker Albert Ho told AFP.

"It seems that the police have duly removed some of the barricades to make way for the suspected triads to get through to the peaceful protesters," Civic Party lawmaker Claudia Mo told AFP.

Taxi drivers had also converged on the site with their cars, demanding the barricades be removed and other anti-Occupy groups chanted "Occupy is illegal".

Anti-Occupy protesters mainly dissipated as the day wore on, while pro-democracy demonstrators set about reinforcing their positions in case the police return for a second dawn raid on Tuesday.

In Admiralty activists laid down cement foundations and built up bamboo pole barricades blocking both lanes of a highway, using everything from steel chains to plastic ties and sticky tape to strengthen the structures, even enlisting sympathetic construction workers for help with their building work.

Protesters also filled plastic barricades with water, making them difficult to move, after police warned Monday they would move to clear more "obstacles" from the protest sites.

"We will not eliminate the possibility of using minimal force or arrest actions," police senior superintendent Hui Chun-tak told reporters.

He said that three men had been arrested during the earlier scuffles, one for assault and two for carrying offensive weapons.

- Triad allegations -

Parts of Hong Kong have been at a standstill over the last fortnight, prompting clashes with elements who oppose the blockades and widespread disruption to businesses and travel.

It was the second time since the mass protests began that authorities had been accused of cooperating with criminal gangs.

In previous clashes at the secondary site of Mongkok 10 days ago, police said eight of the 19 arrested had triad backgrounds.

Furious pro-democracy protesters also accused the authorities of using thugs Monday.

"The government wants Hong Kong people to fight each other, that's how they want to win," protester Angela Li said.

"All the people using violence and causing trouble are paid thugs."

Police said that the clashes were due to "people unlawfully blocking the roads with obstacles".

Earlier Hong Kong's embattled leader Leung Chun-ying had told reporters in the Chinese city of Guangzhou that he wanted the protests to end.

"Under the appropriate situation we hope to allow society to return to normal as quickly as possible," he said on the sidelines of a trade meeting.

- 'Zero chance' of success -

On Sunday, Chief Executive Leung had said the protesters had "almost zero chance" of changing Beijing's stance and securing free elections.

China announced in August that while Hong Kongers will be able to vote for Leung's successor in 2017, only two or three vetted candidates will be allowed to stand -- an arrangement the protesters dismiss as "fake democracy".

Students and pro-democracy campaigners have taken to the streets -- sometimes in their tens of thousands -- since last month to call for Beijing to change its position and to demand Leung's resignation.

Talks between student leaders and city officials collapsed last week, deepening the crisis in the semi-autonomous city.

China has in recent weeks held around 40 people on the mainland who had expressed support for the protests in Hong Kong, according to rights groups.

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